My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! -
Episode-168
Chapter : 335
“Thank you,” Lloyd replied with a cheerful grin. “I consider that a compliment of the highest order. My goal here is not to hang in a museum for future generations of art critics to ponder. My goal is to sell an obscene amount of soap to the current generation of people with dirty hands and disposable income. And to do that,” he pushed himself off the canvases and walked towards her, taking a fresh stick of charcoal, “we need to show the benefit. Clearly. Directly. Unambiguously.”
He stood beside her, his presence close, focused, their earlier easy camaraderie momentarily forgotten in the heat of their creative clash. “Look,” he said, his voice softening, becoming more persuasive. He began to sketch on a fresh sheet of parchment, his lines sharp, clean, the movements of an engineer, not an artist. “You are thinking about the ‘what’. A beautiful woman. I am thinking about the ‘why’. Why is she beautiful? Why is she happy?”
He quickly sketched the two figures. On the left, the ‘before’ woman. He drew her hunched slightly, her hair dull, her skin, rendered in a few, clever cross-hatched lines, looking rough, irritated. He drew a subtle, almost invisible, frown on her face, a weariness in her eyes. Beside her, on a rough wooden stool, sat a lumpy, unattractive block of lye soap.
“This is her reality,” Lloyd explained quietly. “The daily grind. The harshness. The discomfort. The viewer, especially a female viewer, will recognize this. The chapped hands. The dull skin. They will feel a flicker of sympathy, of recognition.”
Then, he moved to the right side of the parchment. He sketched the ‘after’ woman. Her posture was open, relaxed, her head tilted back slightly in a silent expression of pure, sensory pleasure. He drew her skin not just clean, but… glowing. He used subtle shading to suggest a luminous, healthy radiance. He drew her hair with a soft, vibrant sheen. And her hands… her hands were surrounded by a cloud of rich, creamy, impossibly luxurious lather, the texture almost palpable even in the simple charcoal sketch. And on her face, a small, serene, secret smile. Beside her, on an elegant marble stand, sat the Aura dispenser, its oak-and-steel form a symbol of the refinement she had achieved.
“And this,” Lloyd murmured, his voice a low, compelling hum, “is the promise. This is the ‘why’. She is not just clean; she is transformed. She is not just washing; she is indulging in a moment of private, luxurious, self-care. The viewer doesn't just see a result; they see an aspiration. They see the feeling they want to feel. The person they want to be.”
He set the charcoal down. “It is not a diagram, Faria. It is a story. A very simple, very powerful, and very, very persuasive, human story. From discomfort to pleasure. From mundane to magnificent. All facilitated by a single, revolutionary product.”
Faria was silent for a long time, her gaze fixed on his rough, but undeniably effective, sketch. The artist in her, the purist, still recoiled slightly from the stark, commercial directness of it. It felt… manipulative.
But the strategist in her, the sharp, intelligent woman who had braved a cursed forest for a desperate cause, could not deny its power. It was simple. It was direct. And it was, she had to admit with a grudging, almost infuriated, respect, utterly, undeniably, brilliant. The message was inescapable. It transcended language, it transcended class. It spoke directly to a universal human desire: the desire to feel better, to be better.
She looked from the sketch to Lloyd’s face, at the quiet, confident conviction in his eyes. He wasn't just a merchant. He was a psychologist. A propagandist. He understood not just how to make things, but how to make people want them.
A slow, wry smile, a smile of concession, of defeat, of a new, grudging understanding, touched her lips. “You are a devil, Lloyd Ferrum,” she said, her voice a soft, almost admiring, whisper. “A clever, persuasive, soap-selling devil.” She picked up her own piece of charcoal. “Very well. We will paint your… ‘persuasive human story’. But,” she added, her own artistic pride reasserting itself, “I will make it so beautiful, so filled with light and texture and genuine human emotion, that even the stuffiest old masters at the Academy will be forced to weep at its sheer, vulgar, commercial brilliance.”
Lloyd grinned, a wide, triumphant grin. The debate was over. The partnership was forged anew, in the crucible of a shared, revolutionary, artistic vision. “I would expect nothing less, Lady Faria,” he said. “Now, let’s talk about the exact pearlescent quality of that lather…”
Chapter : 336
The creative fire in the garden pavilion burned bright and hot. The days were a blur of intense collaboration, a whirlwind of charcoal dust, vibrant pigments, and spirited, passionate debate. The large canvas, now resting on the central easel, was slowly, painstakingly, coming to life under Faria’s masterful hand, guided by Lloyd’s strategic, almost clinical, vision. The ‘before’ woman was emerging from the canvas, her skin subtly chafed, her expression a masterpiece of weary resignation. It was a partnership that was as productive as it was unexpected, an easy, intellectual camaraderie that felt a world away from the usual stifling formalities of their class.
It was during a break in one of these intense sessions that Lloyd found himself needing a specific pigment, a rare cobalt blue that he knew was stored in the estate’s main art supply repository, a small, dusty chamber adjoining the grand library. He excused himself from the pavilion, leaving Faria contemplating the precise shade of ‘mundane despair’ for the background of the ‘before’ panel, and made his way back towards the main estate building.
He was striding through the cavernous, echoing expanse of the main hall, his mind still half-occupied with the physics of light refraction on a soap bubble, when a figure stepped from the shadows of a massive stone pillar, directly into his path.
It was Rosa.
Lloyd froze mid-stride, his pleasant, art-induced reverie shattering into a thousand pieces. She stood there, a vision of icy, sapphire-silk perfection, her face, as always, concealed by the delicate, silver-threaded veil. She was a silent, beautiful, and deeply intimidating roadblock.
The air around her, Lloyd could have sworn, was several degrees colder than the rest of the hall. The cheerful sunlight slanting through the high windows seemed to dim slightly as it touched her, as if reluctant to intrude upon her personal, portable glacier.
“Rosa,” he managed, his voice a little too loud in the sudden, heavy silence. He offered a smile that felt strained, unnatural. “I… I was just on my way to the art stores. We… Faria and I… we needed more blue.” He was babbling. Why was he babbling?
Rosa did not respond immediately. Her obsidian eyes, the only part of her face truly visible, swept over him. It wasn't a casual glance; it was a comprehensive, analytical scan. He felt as if she were taking his inventory, cataloging the charcoal dust on his tunic, the smudge of ultramarine on his cheek, the lingering scent of linseed oil that probably clung to him.
“Your… ‘art project’… seems to be progressing,” she stated finally. Her voice was the usual flat, cool monotone, yet each word felt like a perfectly polished, perfectly chilled, stone, dropped into the quiet hall. It wasn’t a question. It wasn’t a pleasantry. It was an observation. A data point, logged and filed.
“It is,” Lloyd confirmed, feeling a strange need to defend the project, to justify the time he was spending on it. “Faria is… a remarkable talent. Her mastery of color is… astounding. We’re making excellent progress on the… uh… the commission.” He was still babbling. Stop babbling, his internal voice screamed.
Rosa tilted her head, a minute, almost imperceptible gesture. “Indeed. Lady Faria’s presence at the estate has been… noted. She spends a great deal of her time in your company, Lloyd. In the garden pavilion. Alone.”
The statement was delivered with the same cool, factual precision she might use to observe that the sun had risen in the east. But beneath the surface, Lloyd felt it. An undercurrent. A quiet, almost subliminal, charge. This wasn’t just an observation; it was an accusation, veiled in the thinnest possible veneer of political propriety.
“The nature of our collaboration requires close proximity,” Lloyd explained, his own voice becoming slightly defensive. “Art is not created via formal correspondence. And we are hardly ‘alone’. There are servants, guards…”
“But the perception, Lloyd,” she cut in, her voice still perfectly level, yet somehow sharper. “The perception is one of… familiarity. The Arch Duke’s heir, recently married, spending his days in a secluded pavilion with a beautiful, unmarried, and notably… high-spirited… Southern Marquess’s daughter. Such things… they fuel gossip. They create political vulnerabilities. It is… unseemly. A potential embarrassment to the main line. And to our,” she paused, the word hanging in the air, cold and heavy, “alliance.”
She had framed it perfectly. A logical, political concern. A wife reminding her husband of his duty, of the need to maintain appearances for the sake of their houses. It was unassailable. Reasonable. Utterly, completely, devoid of any personal emotion.
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